According to Steamspy's data, 45% of the game's sales are coming from the PC/Steam version (though this number may be higher as Steamspy's data is around 3-4 days behind the real sales).

As reported by Forbes, Warhorse Studios have a series of patches in the pipeline for home consoles and PC to address some of the more pressing issues that reviewers and gamers complained about when it comes to the technical performance of the game, such as the UI, some of the clipping issues, and a few fixes for some of the bugged quests sprinkled throughout the rather massive open-world RPG. The workaround, it turns out, is to roll back the game's files to version 1.2.2, accept the quest, then re-update the game back to the somewhat buggy 1.2.5 version.

Where most other medieval RPGs populate their worlds with magic and dragons, Kingdom Come eschews all of the fantasy trappings typically associated with the genre for a story that's firmly rooted in history.

"This error prevented the quest, "Ginger in a Pickle" to start or to keep executing its internal logic properly", the studio continued, noting that they had to revert the game back to version 1.2.2 for a time to let players continue past the mission.